I have and really like the Flipside 400 AW. It's comfortable to wear with a load, and will hold the gear you list. I like the Flipside design, you can access your gear withour setting your bag on the ground. I also have the Flipside 300 for carrying less (and I can see a Flipside 500 AW in my future if I need to travel with my 600mm lens).

Take a look at the Thinktank Streetwalker Pro HD. Great sturdy bag. It can hold all that you stated. It's a backpack, though. So you have to decide if you want a backpack or a shoulder bag. Perhaps you should look into a roller bag, if you are not going on hikes in the woods with your gear. I suggest the Thinktank airport line of roller bags.

I have and really like the Flipside 400 AW. It's comfortable to wear with a load, and will hold the gear you list. I like the Flipside design, you can access your gear withour setting your bag on the ground. I also have the Flipside 300 for carrying less (and I can see a Flipside 500 AW in my future if I need to travel with my 600mm lens).

+1

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In landscape photography, when you shoot is more important than where.

OK... the reason I ask is Lowe pro makes good bags and belt systems.I use their "stealth reporter D550 AW & D300 AW" by no means is the D550AW "stealth" its quite big. but what these bags do have are Loops on the L&R sides of them which allow the belt system lens, body and accessory pouches to be attached. although they are external... it allows for overflow Items to be carried with the bag...just a suggestion for flexibility... I use soft bags as per-job modular transport and hard cases for storage and ALL-IN jobs...good luck... getting the right bag is a quite personal thing

5D3 gripped430EX70-200 IS II24-105Sigma 50/1.4Sigma 14/2.82x extenderKenko tube setYongnuo 622 triggersChargerGrip battery insertPlenty of batteries (takes about same space as one small lens)CF and other small stuff

paul13walnut5

Regardless of my personal feelings, when carrying a 15 lb (or more) load, my back really likes two shoulder straps and a hip belt, vs. just one shoulder strap...

Hib belt great for stopping the bag swinging, terrible for screwing up your lower back, a chest strap is the way to go, weight over shoulders and chest. My current bag lacks the chest strap but as it's great for me in every other way I'm thinking of getting a chest-strap stitched on.

Hib belt great for stopping the bag swinging, terrible for screwing up your lower back, a chest strap is the way to go, weight over shoulders and chest.

Years of backpacking experience disagree - there's a reason backpacking packs have supportive hip belts. Obviously, you should do what's best for you, but the general recommendation is to have more weight on the hips than the shoulders.

Granted, some hip belts on camera packs are useless - the Flipside 300 is in that category. But the 400 AW has a decently supportive hip belt (although not as good the one on the Osprey internal frame pack I use for backpacking).